Welcome

Lovers of language and literature, this is the place where you can work together to improve future generations of language technology. By indicating relationships between words and phrases you will help to create a resource that is rich in linguistic information.

Don't worry if you spend hours playing this game - you'll be doing it in the name of Science.

When you play Phrase Detectives you will be asked your opinion of how phrases in texts (both fiction and
non-fiction) refer to each other. This is done in two game styles:

1) NAME THE CULPRIT
You will be shown a text with a phrase highlighted in
orange. You will be asked if this phrase refers to an entity
(person, or other object) that has already been mentioned in the text.
For example, you might see:

Sherlink Holmes went to the shop.
He got some tobacco for his pipe.

In this example, the phrase in orange, He, refers to the same person
as the phrase "Sherlink Holmes" in the previous sentence. In such
cases, you should click on the earlier phrase and then on the Done button.

However, not all phrases refer to a previously mentioned
things. In the text above, for instance, the phrases "some tobacco"
and "his pipe" in the second sentence refer to objects not mentioned
in the previous sentence. In these cases you
should click the Not mentioned before button.

2) DETECTIVES CONFERENCE
You will be asked whether you agree with another
detective's decision. An example of this might be:

Sherlink Holmes went to the shop.
He couldn't believe it was closed.

If you think that the word in orange, It, refers to the same object
as the phrase in blue, the shop, you should say that you agree with
this decision.

You could win £50 in Amazon vouchers
for being the top scorer of the month, as well as
other prizes for being in the top 10, if you have a minimum score of 5000 points in the month.
If you have more than 10,000 points in the month, you get DOUBLE THE PRIZE!

When you play a head-to-head game you will be rated against expert answers. If you rating is 100 and you have over 1000 points, you automatically join the 100 Club and will be entered into a monthly draw for a £50 Amazon voucher.

Did you know you can add comments in the game? Some of these comments have been extremely valuable to the team and the most useful each month will get an extra prize of £30 Amazon voucher.

To enter, simply play the game and start scoring points. Winners will be contacted by email so if you want to win please
add your email, on your Settings page.
Full details are in the FAQ.

Good luck!

June 2019

This year has been a busy year for the DALI team analysing and publishing results from Phrase Detectives, including releasing the second version of the annotated corpus. Read the latest publications about the project on the about page.

April 2019

Head office confirm prizes will be continuing into 2019. Great news for you hard working players!

December 2018

We're back! The geeks have been working hard to produce a new version of Phrase Detectives that takes the best bits of the Facebook version (RIP) and updates the original game.
Phrase Detectives version 2 may have a few teething problems as players are integrated over so get in contact is something odd happens and we'll get it fixed.

Sept 2018

The team met up at Queen Mary University to discuss progress of Year 2 in the DALI project. Some of our goals are well ahead, which is great news.

May 2018

The team ran a workshop at LREC'18 called Games4NLP where researchers and game developers got together to share ideas.

Wellington

13726

magoogy

8135

AColson

2251

4

JRS

2185

5

christie.parker@gmail.com

373

6

jon

67

livio.robaldo

596630

Wellington

443335

JRS

430731

johnnickel

393703

JMS

358366

magoogy

332869

VB

303714

axnicho

295335

papillon

283557

gully

274726

shoby

2431

smallkitten1

1246

bw

7695

lali

1402

tortoise

11432

Wellington

443335

jurs02

1024

Vasha

5101

panne

3368

ggw10

3922

565 documents completed

The most recent was The Case of Lady Sannox (Arthur Conan Doyle) completed by Wellington on 11 Aug 2019

The last document to be worked on was
Alpha Kappa Alpha (Wikipedia) by AColson